Reddit Is Testing Country-Specific Home Pages That Highlight 'Geo Popular'Â Content

Authored by gadgets.ndtv.com and submitted by asteriskspace

Reddit is exploring a new way to make its front page more relevant to its readers. The social aggregation and discussion website is testing tailored home pages based on a reader's location in select places, Gadgets 360 spotted on Wednesday. The company has confirmed to us that it is indeed testing "geo popular" home pages.

As part of the test, readers in Australia, Canada, India, Ireland, Mexico, New Zealand, and United Kingdom could see a banner when they visit Reddit.com informing them of the new home page. It's unclear if registered and signed in users are also a part of the experiment.

Testing from India, in one case we found several stories from r/India and r/cricket (no surprise given the sport's popularity in the country) subreddits populate the home page. Reddit is also letting people switch the home page to any of the aforementioned country's home pages. Users also have the option to switch to the global - universal - home page.

In a statement, a Reddit spokesperson told Gadgets 360, "We've been testing new geo-based popular feeds as a way to surface more relevant content to users based on their location," reserving any timeframe for when - and if - Reddit plans to roll-out this feature to all its users.

"We'll be adjusting as we receive feedback from users," the spokesperson added, reaffirming that users will be "able to toggle locations to see popular posts in other geographical areas or globally."

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An analyst welcomed the move and said tailored homepage would appeal more to a reader.

"I'd say that simply put, Reddit on a global basis is always likely to skew towards the US content, e.g. right now the front page of Reddit.com has two stories about US politics at the top. But those aren't necessarily the stories site visitors from Mexico or the UK want to see first, so showing them more relevant content makes a ton of sense," Jan Dawson, chief analyst and founder at Jackdaw Research told Gadgets 360.

"Google, major news websites, and plenty of other sites already show local versions of their home pages in different countries and regions, so Reddit is just following a longstanding trend here. It's smart, though, to give users the option of viewing a different version of the site too - some visitors may explicitly want to see the US version (or some other version)," he added.

signalfire_ on July 14th, 2017 at 11:03 UTC »

"Front page of the internet" Last time I checked the internet was worldwide...

Reddit is also letting people switch the home page to any of the aforementioned country's home pages. Users also have the option to switch to the global - universal - home page.

Not entirely switching the feeds, still extra hassle, but better than an unchangeable country-specific option.

FPS_Coke on July 14th, 2017 at 10:52 UTC »

Redditors can already tailor their subreddits and other options within the subreddits they subscribe to. "Making it easier" means taking away control and actually just creating channels for marketing and advertising, it would appear.

Triforce_Bagels on July 14th, 2017 at 08:33 UTC »

Maybe this is just the cynic rising in me as I get older, but it seems more like a way to target ads at people in smaller communities so that they have more penetration.

Just seems like every decision to "improve user experience" in websites is nothing more than subterfuge on the part of advertising agencies.

I understand monetization but it feels like everyone is only concerned with infinite growth anymore. Only thing that matters anymore is money and I get tired of thinking about it and how little I have when I'm constantly being asked to spend it.

Just my 2c. Won't matter in the long run anyways.